U.S. securities trading regulations have been adjusted. With the end of the "model day trader" rule, stock day trading accounts are no longer required to maintain a minimum balance of $25,000, thus significantly lowering the threshold for small accounts to participate in high-frequency trading.
The $25,000 threshold has been removed.
This restriction was first implemented after the bursting of the dot-com bubble in 2001. At that time, many retail investors suffered losses in trading overvalued tech stocks, and regulators subsequently required accounts identified as "model day traders" to maintain at least $25,000 in assets.
After the new rules take effect, retail investors with account assets below $25,000 can now engage in more frequent day trading without being subject to previous limits on the number of trades. Some short-term trading arrangements that were previously inaccessible due to insufficient capital are now open to smaller accounts.
Securities firms can implement in stages
According to regulatory documents, this adjustment does not require all institutions to complete the system switch simultaneously. If securities firms need more time to handle compliance and risk control transformation, they can implement it in stages, with the transition period lasting up to October 20, 2027.
- The old rule required a minimum account balance of $25,000.
- The transition period ends on October 20, 2027.
- Small brokerage firms' grace period: approximately 18 months
Margin restrictions remain in place
The removal of the threshold does not mean the disappearance of risk constraints. Regulatory documents show that if an account fails to replenish the special maintenance margin requirement within 5 business days of the margin shortage, the account can only trade on a cash-based basis for the next 90 days, or until the relevant margin is replenished.
This means that the adjustment primarily targets entry barriers, rather than abandoning risk management for high-frequency short-term trading. For retail investors, the lower entry barrier expands their trading opportunities, but margin requirements, risk control, and brokerage execution requirements remain.












